When it comes to communicating with your list(s), whether through a newsletter, blog, social media or any other mechanism, you have to ask yourself, “How much is enough?” and “How much is too much?”
How often should I contact them? What is a good length or word count for my articles or posts or videos?
Because if you send them too much or too often, you might overwhelm them and lose them. They might unsubscribe or they might stop reading or listening and responding.
But the same can happen if you give them too little.
If they don’t see value in what you send them, or they don’t hear from you often enough and forget who you are, they will leave or tune you out.
That’s not necessarily fatal, however. The only metric that really counts is the amount of business you get from your articles or posts.
How many new clients, repeat clients, up-sells and cross-sells, and referrals is the only thing that matters. Everything else is nice to have but not essential, even if you could track it.
Opens? Clicks? Shares? Engagement? Hard to track, and if you have a small list, usually not worth the effort.
Capice?
Still, you don’t want to overwhelm people with too much information, any more than you want them to stop following or listening to you because you send them too little.
You also don’t want to make more work for yourself than necessary.
You want to build a “relationship” with them, so that they come to know, like and trust you, and eventually hire or refer you. You do that by providing valuable and interesting information, and making it good enough that they look forward to getting your next.
What makes it good enough? It doesn’t need to be brilliant or exhaustive. It simply needs to be interesting and relevant to your readers.
As for quantity, when it comes to a newsletter or blog post, I suggest you publish or post once a week. Often enough to keep your name in front of your list, but not so often that anyone tunes out or you can’t keep it up.
And keeping it up is important because you never know when someone will be ready to hire an attorney or has a friend who needs one.
You can publish more often than once a week. Whether or not you should do that depends on your practice area, your market, and you.
You need to find a happy middle ground, one which keeps people reading and responding, and allows you to publish regularly, without taking up too much of your time.
As for length, a few paragraphs or a few hundred words are enough, and certainly not too much. You’ll never overwhelm anyone by sending them something they can consume in 2 or 3 minutes.
Shorter posts are easier to write and take less time. You can do everything in less than an hour a week.
Not too hot, not too cold. It’s just about right.